By ALLAN ODHIAMBO, aodhiambo@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- The security alert was first made public through a leaked internal memo to airport managers by the KAA head of security, Eric Kiraithe.
- Mr Kiraithe said the Islamist group Al-Shabaab planned to carry out suicide terrorist attacks on Kenyan airports in Nairobi and Mombasa and called for vigilance.
- KAA acting managing director Yatich Kangugo termed the action “precautionary”, adding that the country’s airports and airstrips were not under imminent threat.
Kenya on Monday stepped up surveillance at its
airports in the wake of reports that Somalia-based Al-Shabaab terrorist
group planned to attack aviation facilities in Nairobi and Mombasa.
Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) acting managing director
Yatich Kangugo termed the action “precautionary”, adding that the
country’s airports and airstrips were not under imminent threat.
“We wish to inform the general public that the
aviation industry is very sensitive to all security matters. We take
proactive action on any intelligence information however frivolous it
may seem,” Mr Kangugo said on Monday.
“KAA is aware of the prevailing global terrorism
threat by among others Al-Shabaab who have issued threats against Kenya.
We have consequently raised our operational threat category to high
alert in conjunction with other national security organs who have
increased vigilance to counter any potential threats.”
The security alert was first made public through a
leaked internal memo to airport managers by the KAA head of security,
Eric Kiraithe.
In the memo dated February 26, Mr Kiraithe said the
Islamist group Al-Shabaab planned to carry out suicide terrorist
attacks on Kenyan airports in Nairobi and Mombasa and called for
vigilance.
“The attacks mainly target domestic flights and
operatives posing as passengers intend to blow themselves up during
landing. Consequently a team of eleven suicide bombers have undergone
training within Somalia on airborne suicide missions in readiness for
the attacks,” the KAA security boss said.
Mr Kiraithe named the Jomo Kenyatta International
Airport (JKIA), Moi International Airport Mombasa (MIA) and Nairobi’s
Wilson Airport as possible targets.
Mr Kangugo Monday acknowledged the content of the leaked document but said no airport was under imminent threat.
“We therefore wish to assure our citizens and all
airport users that KAA airports and designated airstrips are not under
any imminent threat. I want to report that normal operations are
ongoing,” he said.
The KAA chief’s comments came in the wake of
increased violence by Al-Shaabab in Somalia. The militia group bombed a
busy junction and a nearby restaurant in the town of Baidoa on Sunday,
killing at least 30 people.
The Baidoa blasts came in the wake of a car bomb
attack in the Somalia capital, Mogadishu, near a park and a hotel on
Friday that killed 14 people.
Al-Shabaab said it was also behind a likely bomb
blast that forced an Airbus A321 into an emergency landing early this
month in Mogadishu. One man was killed in the February 2 incident aboard
the Daallo Airlines plane.
Local authorities north of Mogadishu said the body
of a man, believed to have been sucked out through a hole made by the
blast in the fuselage, was found in their area.
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